The case concerns a 3-year-old healthy child so far. The last, running on the boards, ripped open his left leg from the back outer surface of the foot.
A person suffering from syphilis has been prescribed calcium iodide (Sol. e. 4.0-180.0 4 times a day with a tablespoon) during the course. In the evening of the same day, after taking the 3rd spoon of the medicine, a patient with a still feeling well had a fever of 39°R, a terrible runny nose and severe swallowing pain.
In the spring (April 3) of this year, I was urgently invited to sick N., I found her in a deep faint. Upon the provision of appropriate assistance, the patient reported that among her full well-being — she was sitting, sewing — her head was spinning, “everything went in her eyes,” something pushed her and she didn't remember anything else. It was in the morning. She had a good day, she didn't complain about anything.
The Sterlitamak Zemsky Hospital has 34 beds and in the year under review it had four rooms: an infectious disease room, one for women, and two for men, the smaller of which was intended for clean operated patients, while the other was for purulent and therapeutic patients (the rooms were painted with oil paint); women after the surgeries were transferred to the general ward. The two operating theatres were clean and pusy; they were adjacent, painted with oil paint; in the case of pus, the two operating theatres were carefully fumigated with formalin, followed by soap washout and Sulema 1 : 1000. The rooms and the operating theatre were ventilated in the windows.
Changes in the nerve cells of the heart are of tremendous pathological interest, says Huile White, who failed to notice what was abnormal in them, and everything, according to his observation, was limited only to the surrounding parts of the cells. Another researcher, Eisenlhor, finds changes in them, but finds it difficult to draw the boundaries between the physiological and pathological states of them and admits a constant cyclic change of a regressive and progressive nature, re- and degeneration.
The list of individual observations of leukemia just presented clearly shows that the authors in most of the cases simultaneously cite indications for a short course of the disease, without attaching particular importance to this circumstance. It can be said that these cases would have remained unused if at that time the question of hemohistogenesis and hemohistopathology were not on the agenda. And only a few researchers paid attention to the existence of the disease at a fast pace.
On October 16, 1901, I opened the corpse of a student of the Kazan Veterinary Institute, V.A., 22 years old, who died in the therapeutic department of the faculty clinic. Clinical diagnosis was: Morbus maculosus Werlhofii.
The subject, with a significantly pronounced general arteriosclerosis, was admitted to the hospital for senile gangrene of the right foot. On the next day after the operation (amputation in the upper part of the lower leg), the patient felt an undefined character of pain in the lower abdomen, which intensified over the next days and spread to the navel.
In surgical practice for esophageal cancer, there are a number of palliative aids and a radical operation of a relatively recent origin — resection of the esophagus. Until now, this operation is in the development period.
Lung surgery is one of the youngest departments of surgical science. The basis for the development of methods of operative intervention in pulmonary diseases lies in the 1st possibility of preventing the danger of pneumothorax, which (danger) is currently so insignificant that some surgeons consider it even necessary to cause preliminary pneumothorax. On the other hand, the experimental data have shown the possibility of the loss of parts of the lung tissue and the conditions for the healing of its wounds.
In 1901, Wells described a radical hernia repair according to the method developed by Symonds, the main idea of which is to approach the hernial sac from the side of the peritoneal cavity.
In one case, with a slightly reduced right kidney with two arterial trunks, the left one is significantly enlarged (12.5 X 5.5 and 7.0 ctm.) And lies at the level from 12 thoracic vertebra to the upper 1/2 of the fourth lumbar vertebra.
Literary data concerning trepanation in epilepsy, at first gave hope for a brilliant future for it, since statistics indicated a significant % of recovery. Further observations, however, showed the numbers of successful outcomes of operations should be reduced.
In a healthy, strong, correct development of a woman in the course of 4 1/2 years, a tumor developed on the hard palate, which during this time reached the size of a chicken egg. The tumor is painless; covered with an unchanged mucous membrane, freely rising into the fold, hard-elastic consistency, tuberous.
In the lumbar region, limited by the line of the lumbar vertebrae, the 12th rib and the end of the II-nd, perpendicular, pubescent from here on crist. os. il. and later, hernia may appear.
From the literature data, it is clear that the emergence of postoperative pneumonia should be linked to a variety of reasons. These are: a) chloroforic and ether anesthesia; b) immobility of patients with shallow breathing and especially with weak cardiac activity; c) ingestion of pieces of mucus, food into the respiratory tract, which can easily happen, especially with vomiting; d) cooling of patients during the operation; f) embolism of infection from the wound.
The English trade and industrial company Duncan and Flockgardt and Co. in a recently sent circular indicates that the distillation of different varieties of chloroform produces various residues of colloidal or crystalline composition. This prompted the author to undertake a number of studies on various varieties of commercial German chloroform.
By presenting a historical overview of the beginning of the study of the disruption of the vascular system of the skin and the further development of this issue, the author, based on a study of 87 mentally ill people in the sense of red or white dermographism, makes some conclusions, and tries to give a physiological explanation of these phenomena.
The author observed a sick soldier who had suddenly experienced deafness due to suspicions of simulations.
In view of the rarity of the crimes committed in the state of mania and maniacal agitation, and therefore of the significant interest and importance of such cases in forensic psychiatric attitudes, the author in his article reports two observations concerning two subjects who were in the Kazan District Medical Center.
The author describes 2 cases of traumatic spinal cord injury.